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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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[2024] ZAGPJHC 865
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## Timbela Trading Close Corporation v Anglo American Platinum Limited and Another (21/23506)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 865 (9 September 2024)
Timbela Trading Close Corporation v Anglo American Platinum Limited and Another (21/23506)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 865 (9 September 2024)
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sino date 9 September 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 21/23506
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: YES
In the matter between:
TIMBELA
TRADING CLOSE CORPORATION
Plaintiff
and
ANGLO
AMERICAN PLATINUM LIMITED
First Defendant
MODIKWA
PLATINUM MINE
Second Defendant
Delivered:
9 September 2024 – This judgment is handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties' representatives via
email, uploading
it to CaseLines and releasing it to SAFLII.
ORDER
1.
The action is stayed pending the final determination
of the disputes
on the pleadings by an arbitrator in terms of clause 24 of the
agreement dated 17 May 2021.
2.
The plaintiff shall pay the costs of the special
plea on the party
and party scale, including the cost of counsel at scale B.
JUDGMENT
BESTER
AJ:
[1]
The plaintiff, Timbela Trading CC, sues the first defendant,
Anglo
American Platinum Limited, for damages and the return of equipment in
terms of a written contract concluded in May 2021.
The second
defendant is an unincorporated joint venture between the first
defendant and Arm Mining Consortium Limited, represented
by the first
defendant.
[2]
The plaintiff initially brought its claim by way of application.
On 14 February 2022, Wright J referred the matter to trial, with
the notice of motion standing as simple summons.
[3]
In the action, as in the application, the defendants
raised a special
plea that the disputes between the parties are subject to an
arbitration agreement. Although there was no
agreement between
the parties to separate the special plea, they agreed at the hearing
that it was necessary to hear the special
plea first. I thus
allowed the separation of the special plea and heard argument in
respect thereof.
[4]
The parties did not present any evidence. It is
common cause on
the pleadings that a written contract for the provision of services
was entered between the plaintiff and the first
defendant on 17 May
2021. It is also common cause that the contract includes an
arbitration clause which in relevant parts
provides as follows:
“
Subject to the
provisions of clause 24.8, any dispute arising out of or in
connection with the Agreement, including any question
regarding its
existence, validity or termination, shall be referred to and finally
resolved by arbitration.”
[5]
Clause 24.8 provides that a party is not precluded from
seeking
urgent relief from a court of competent jurisdiction pending an award
by the arbitrator. The further provisions of
clause 24 deal
with procedural aspects of the arbitration. The parties agree
that the disputes on the pleadings fall within
the ambit of the
arbitration clause.
[6]
The defendant did not replicate to the special plea but
relied on
allegations contained in its declaration in opposing the special
plea.
# Challenges to arbitration
agreements
Challenges to arbitration
agreements
[7]
Section 3
of the
Arbitration Act, 42 of 1965
, provides as follows:
“
3
Binding effect of arbitration agreement and power of court in
relation thereto
(1) Unless
the agreement otherwise provides, an arbitration agreement
shall not be capable of being terminated
except by consent of all the
parties thereto.
(2) The
court may at any time on the application of any party to
an arbitration agreement, on good cause
shown-
(a
)
set aside the arbitration agreement; or
(b)
order
that any particular dispute referred to in the arbitration agreement
shall not be referred to arbitration;
or
(c)
order
that the arbitration agreement shall cease to have effect
with reference to any dispute referred.”
[8]
Section 6
of the Act further provides that:
“
6 Stay of
legal proceedings where there is an arbitration agreement
(1) If any party to an
arbitration agreement commences any legal proceedings in any court
(including any inferior court) against
any other party to the
agreement in respect of any matter agreed to be referred to
arbitration, any party to such legal proceedings
may at any time
after entering appearance but before delivering any pleadings or
taking any other steps in the proceedings, apply
to that court for a
stay of such proceedings.
(2) If on any such
application the court is satisfied that there is no sufficient reason
why the dispute should not be referred
to arbitration in accordance
with the agreement, the court may make an order staying such
proceedings subject to such terms and
conditions as it may consider
just.”
[9]
In
Crompton
Street Motors
[1]
the Constitutional Court explained the application of
section 6(2)
of
the
Arbitration Act in
the following terms:
“
[41]
Section 6(2)
of the
Arbitration Act allows
a court to stay proceedings 'if [upon
application in terms of
s 6(1)]
the court is satisfied that there is
no sufficient reason why the dispute should not be referred to
arbitration in accordance with
the agreement'. The language of
s 6(2)
directs a court acting under that section to stay proceedings where
such an application is made unless sufficient countervailing
reasons
exist for the dispute not to be referred to arbitration. The words
'no
sufficient
reason
why the dispute
should
not
be
referred to arbitration' denote that the standard position is that a
stay should be granted upon request. The onus of satisfying
the court
that the matter
should
not
be
referred to arbitration and instead heard by the High Court is on the
party who instituted the legal proceedings.
[2]
In
Universiteit
van Stellenbosch
[3]
the
then Appellate Division held that, when a court is faced with a stay
application, the discretion to refuse arbitration
in the
circumstances should be exercised judicially, and only when a 'very
strong case' has been made out.
[4]
This
high threshold for refusal is because the party who does not want the
matter referred to arbitration 'is seeking
to deprive the other party
of the advantage of arbitration to which the latter is entitled'.”
[5]
[10]
The
Constitutional Court (in
Crompton
)
endorsed the finding of the Supreme Court of Appeal in
PCL
Consulting
[6]
that there are two ways in which a party may seek a stay of
proceedings pending arbitration:
“
[32] What then of
the manner in which the applicant applied for the stay? As a matter
of fact, the applicant did not apply for a
stay
before
delivering
its pleadings and, therefore, the High Court was correct to find that
it did not comply with the provisions of
s 6(1)
of the
Arbitration
Act. The
incorporation of the application for a stay in the
applicant's conditional counter-application and answering affidavit
was a step
beyond entering an appearance, and therefore one of the
prerequisites for a stay in terms of
s 6(1)
was absent. However,
non-compliance with
s 6(1)
does not render the request for a stay
invalid. There are two avenues to apply for a stay of proceedings: a
substantive application
in terms of
s 6
of the
Arbitration Act may
be
made, or a special plea requesting a stay of the proceedings pending
the determination of the dispute by arbitration.
[7]
In
PCL
Consulting
the
Supreme Court of Appeal put it in the following terms:
'If a party institutes
proceedings in a court despite an [arbitration] agreement, the other
party has two options:
(i)
It may apply for a stay of the proceedings in terms of
s 6
of the
Arbitration Act 42 of 1965
; or
(ii)
it may in a
special plea (which is in the nature of dilatory plea) pray for a
stay of the proceedings pending the final determination
of the
dispute by arbitration.'
[8]
[33] A special plea for
arbitration is one of several dilatory pleas and can be included in
pleadings.
[9]
Generally,
when a special plea is raised, all the defences on which the
defendant intends to rely must be raised at the same
time.
[10]
This
is so because, should the special plea fail, there would be no
further opportunity to plead over on the merits.
[11]
There
is no objection to pleading a special defence in the course of the
plea, with or without a special heading.
[12]
”
# The plaintiff’s
opposition to the special plea
The plaintiff’s
opposition to the special plea
[11]
The defendants were entitled to raise the special plea. It was
for the
plaintiff to provide sufficient countervailing reasons for
the dispute not to be referred to arbitration.
[12]
Mr Gededger relied on paragraphs 19 to 25 of the declaration in
opposition
to the special plea of jurisdiction. This encompasses the
whole section under the heading “
BREACH OF THE AGREEMENT BY
THE DEFENDANTS”
, and reads as follows:
“
19. On Thursday,
30th July 2020, the Mine Manager of the Second Defendant, Mr Francois
Laubscher ("Laubscher") called
officials of the Plaintiff
(Messrs Tebogo Makgabane and Evander Maboko) to his office wherein he
informed them that he no longer
require the Services of the Plaintiff
at the Mine and demanded keys to their office (which they did give to
him) and he proceeded
to order them (Messrs Tebogo Makgabane and
Evander Maboko) to vacate the Mine premises with immediate effect.
20. After
handing over the keys to Laubscher he instructed Mine Security
Officials to escort officials and employees
of the Plaintiff out of
the mine Site and also ordered the Security to deactivate all the
Electronic Access Cards issued to the
Plaintiff and its personnel and
thereby ensuring that they were barred from entering the Mine Site
going forward.
21. At the
time when the officials of the Plaintiff were ejected off the Mine
Site they were not allowed to remove their
equipment, machinery and
office appliances and in the results all the belongings of the
Plaintiff were left at the Mine Site.
22.
Subsequent to the above mentioned ejectment of the Plaintiff and its
personnel from the Mine Site on 3rd August
2020 the Plaintiff was
served via an email from the First Respondent with a Notice of
Suspension (Letter of Suspension) signed
by Maartin Zimmermann and
this despite the fact that the termination had already occurred on
30th July 2020 when the Plaintiff
and its personnel were ejected from
the Mine Site by Loubscher. I annex hereto the Notice of Suspension
marked Annexure "E".
23. Some 69
days later (after 3rd August 2020) the Plaintiff was served via an
email from the First Respondent with
a Notice of Termination (Letter
of Termination) signed by Maartin Zimmermann. I annex hereto the
Notice of Termination marked Annexure
"F".
24. In the
circumstances, the Second Defendant through its officials has
breached the aforementioned Agreement when:
24.1. Without just cause
arbitrarily took away ((from the Plaintiff's officials) keys in
respect of the office allocated to the
Plaintiff and physically
caused the Plaintiff to be arbitrarily ejected from the Mine Site;
24.2. It arbitrarily
caused the Electronic Access Cards issued to the Plaintiff's
personnel to be deactivated by the Mine Security;
24.3. Without cause
arbitrarily and unlawfully barred the Plaintiff from removing its
equipment, machinery, office appliances and
Company documents;
24.4. It caused the First
Defendant to serve the Plaintiff with a Notice of Suspension dated
3rd August 2020, some three (3) days
after its Official (Laubscher)
had already caused the Plaintiff and its personnel to be arbitrarily
ejected from the Mine Site;
24.5. It caused the
Plaintiff to be suspended for a period in excess of 30 days in direct
contravention of clause 8(d) of the Agreement
and this after the
Second Defendant through its official (Laubscher) had already
arbitrarily ejected the Plaintiff and its personnel
from the Mine
Site;
24.6. It caused the First
Defendant to serve the Plaintiff with a Notice of Termination dated
13th October 2020, some sixty nine
(69) days after its Official
(Laubscher) had already caused the Plaintiff and its personnel to be
arbitrarily ejected from the
Mine Site;
24.7. In addition to the
above the Second Defendant acted unlawfully when it caused a
non-party (First Defendant) to arbitrarily
suspend and terminate the
Agreement it had with the Plaintiff;
24.8. It caused the First
Defendant to unreasonably, unfairly, oppressively unlawfully and
contrary to public policy to arbitrarily
terminate the Agreement
between itself and the Plaintiff in direct contravention of clause
24.1 of the Agreement;
25. The
breaches listed above infringe the constitutional rights of the
Plaintiff:
25.1 enshrined in
Section 34 of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa in
that the
ejectment and subsequent suspension and termination of
the Agreement
between the Plaintiff and the Second Defendant is
oppressive and contrary to public policy in that such
ejectment
and subsequent suspension and termination
were arbitrarily
effected without the Plaintiff being given a hearing;
25.2 enshrined in
Section 9 of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa in that
the
ejectment and subsequent suspension and termination of the
Agreemen
t between the Plaintiff and the Second Defendant is
unreasonable, unfair, oppressive and contrary to public policy in
that such
ejectment and subsequent suspension and termination
were arbitrarily effected without the Plaintiff being afforded
protection and benefits enshrined in Section 9(1) of the Constitution
of the Republic of South Africa;
25.3 In that clause
8.2 (a) relied upon by the Defendants for the
ejectment and
subsequent suspension
of the Plaintiff is unreasonable, unfair,
oppressive and contrary to public policy to the extent that it
allowed the Defendants
to arbitrarily suspend the Plaintiff without
any cause;
25.4 In that such
ejectment and subsequent suspension and termination
infringes
the rights of the Plaintiff enshrined in Section 25 of the
Constitution of the Republic of South Africa in that such
ejectment
and subsequent suspension and termination
is unreasonable,
unfair, oppressive and contrary to public policy to the extent that
it allowed the Defendants without a cause
to arbitrarily deprive the
Plaintiff of its ownership of equipment, machinery and office
appliances;
25.5 In that such
ejectment and subsequent suspension and termination
infringes
the rights of the Plaintiff enshrined in Section 12 of the
Constitution of the Republic of South Africa in that such
ejectment
and subsequent suspension and termination
is unreasonable,
unfair, oppressive and contrary to public policy to the extent that
it allowed the Defendants without just cause
to
arbitrarily eject
and subsequently suspend and terminate
the Agreement between the
Plaintiff and the Second Defendant and thus depriving the Plaintiff
of the freedom to use its properties
(equipment, machinery, office
appliances and Company documents) which to this date remains in
possession of the Second Defendant;
25.6 In that the
above mentioned retention and withholding of properties (equipment,
machinery, office appliances and Company
documents) of the Plaintiff
without just cause infringes the rights of the Plaintiff enshrined in
Section 13 of the Constitution
of the Republic of South Africa in
that it is unreasonable, unfair, oppressive and contrary to public
policy to the extent that
it subjects the Plaintiff to slavery in
that the Second Defendant has and continue to deprive the Plaintiff
the use of its properties
and/or in that the Second Defendants or its
employees continue to arbitrarily retain and deprive the Plaintiff
use of its properties
and/or in that the Second Defendants or its
employees unreasonably, unfairly, oppressively and contrary to public
policy continue
to use the properties (equipment, machinery and
office appliances) of the Plaintiff without just cause and without
compensating
the Plaintiff.
25.7 In that such
ejectment, subsequent suspension and termination and retention of
the Plaintiff's properties
is unreasonable, unfair, oppressive
and contrary to public policy in that it is in breach of the
principles of natural justice
which dictates that
no one shall
be
a
judge in his own case
and
no
man should be condemned unheard
.
”
(emphasis in the
original)
[13]
There are several reasons why the opposition to the special plea must
fail.
First, the plaintiff did not act in terms of
section 3(2)
of
the
Arbitration Act. Second
, it did not plead to the special
plea. In terms of Uniform Rule of Court 25 the plaintiff is taken to
have denied all the allegations
in the special plea. Although the
plaintiff admitted all the allegations in argument, it persisted in
its challenge to the relief.
[14]
Third, the paragraphs relied upon by the plaintiff set out its case
regarding
the defendants’ alleged breach of the agreement, and
nothing more. On no reasonable reading of these paragraphs, or
the declaration as a whole, did the plaintiff plead a basis to avoid
the consequences of the arbitration clause.
[15]
Fourth, the allegations in the paragraphs relied upon are not common
cause.
Save for admitting the delivery of the notices of
suspension and termination, the defendants denied these allegations.
The
plaintiff elected not to lead any evidence in support of its
opposition to the special plea. The plaintiff did not establish
any of the facts upon which it sought to rely in its opposition to
the special plea.
[16]
Fifth, the actual argument advanced by Mr Gededger cannot be found in
any of
the paragraphs quoted from the declaration. Moreover, it
is not sound in law. His argument may be summarised as
follows.
[17]
On 3 August 2020, the first defendant served a notice of suspension
on the
plaintiff. On 13 October 2020, the first defendant
delivered a notice of termination to the plaintiff, giving notice
that
it terminated the agreement with immediate effect. At
least these facts are common cause on the pleadings.
[18]
In terms of clause 8.2(d) of the contract, the suspension
unilaterally imposed
by the first defendant in terms of clause 8.2
shall never exceed 30 consecutive days at a time, unless otherwise
agreed in writing
between the parties. Because the defendants’
termination notice relies on the suspension, which had in fact
already
lapsed after 30 days, the termination is invalid.
[19]
The defendants’ termination is unlawful, arbitrary, an
infringement of
the plaintiff’s right as enshrined in section 9
of the Constitution, and a breach of the contract. As a
consequence,
the plaintiff has forfeited its entitlement to invoke
the arbitration clause.
[20]
Mr
Gededger, appearing for the plaintiff, relied on the Constitutional
Court’s judgment in
Beadica
[13]
to
support this argument. He specifically relied on the
following two paragraphs:
“
[29]
In
Brisley
,
[14]
the Supreme Court of Appeal laid the foundation for its approach to
the proper roles of good faith, fairness and reasonableness
in the
law of contract in the new constitutional era. It held that good
faith does not form an independent or free-floating
basis upon which
a court can refuse to enforce a contractual provision and that the
acceptance of good faith as a self-standing
ground would create an
unacceptable state of uncertainty in our law of contract. According
to the Supreme Court of Appeal,
good faith is a fundamental principle
that underlies the law of contract and is reflected in its particular
rules and doctrines. In
this way, it informs the
substantive law of contract, performing a creative, controlling and
legitimating function. In
a separate concurrence, Cameron
JA emphasised that constitutional principles, particularly those
encapsulated in the Bill of Rights,
permeate all law, including
contract. Where contracts infringe on the fundamental
values embodied in the Constitution,
they will be struck down as
being offensive to public policy.”
and
“
[58]
It must be categorically stated that, in
Botha
,
[15]
this court did not revisit or revise
the
Barkhuizen
test.
Barkhuizen
remains
the leading authority in our law on the role of equity in contract,
as part of public policy considerations.”
[21]
The judgment does not support a single element of the argument
advanced. The
argument has no basis in law or reason. I do not deem
it necessary to analyse the matter any further. The plaintiff has not
established
any reason for me to exercise my discretion to refuse
arbitration.
# Conclusion
Conclusion
[22]
In the result, I order as follows:
a)
The action is stayed pending the final determination
of the disputes
on the pleadings by an arbitrator in terms of clause 24 of the
agreement dated 17 May 2021.
b)
The plaintiff shall pay the costs of the special
plea on the party
and party scale, including the cost of counsel at scale B.
A
Bester
Acting
Judge of the High Court of South Africa
Gauteng
Local Division, Johannesburg
Heard:
9
September 2024
Judgment
Date:
9
September 2024
Appearance for the
Plaintiff:
Mr BF
Gededger instructed by Mmala Attorneys
Appearance for the
Defendants:
Ms L Segeels-Ncube
instructed by Webber Wentzel Attorneys
[1]
Crompton
Street Motors CC t/a Wallers Garage Service Station v Bright Idea
Projects 66 (Pty) Ltd t/a All Fuels
2022
(1) SA 317
(CC) in para 41.
[2]
Kathmer
Investments (Pty) Ltd v Woolworths (Pty) Ltd
1970 (2) SA 498
(A) at 504H;
Metallurgical
and Commercial Consultants (Pty) Ltd v Metal Sales Co (Pty) Ltd
1971 (2) SA 388
(W) at 391C – E.
[3]
Universiteit
van Stellenbosch v JA Louw (Edms) Bpk
1983
(4) SA 321 (A).
[4]
Id at 327C – D.
[5]
Body
Corporate of Via Quinta v Van der Westhuizen NO and Another
[2017]
ZAFSHC 215
in para 41.
[6]
PCL
Consulting (Pty) Ltd t/a Phillips Consulting SA v Tresso Trading 119
(Pty) Ltd
2009
(4) SA 68
(SCA) in para 7.
[7]
Id. See also
Transasia
1 (Pty) Ltd v Arbitration Foundation of South Africa and
Another
[2018]
ZAGPJHC 548 in para 19.
[8]
PCL Consulting above in para 7.
[9]
Foize
Africa (Pty) Ltd v Foize Beheer BV and Others
2013
(3) SA 91
(SCA) in para 30.
[10]
Thyssen
v Cape St Francis Township (Pty) Ltd
1966
(2) SA 115
(E) at 116G.
[11]
David
Beckett Construction (Pty) Ltd v Bristow
1987
(3) SA 275 (W)
at 280E.
[12]
Harms & Hugo
Amler's
Precedents of Pleadings
9
ed (Butterworths 2018) at 5.
[13]
Beadica
231 CC and Others v Trustees, Oregon Trust and Others
2020
(5) SA 247 (CC).
[14]
Brisley
v Drotsky
2002 (4) SA 1
(SCA).
[15]
Botha
and Another v Rich NO and Others
2014
(4) SA 124
(CC).
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